White House Moves To Scrap Trump-Era Rewrite Of Key Environmental Law
President Joe Bidenâs White House moved Wednesday to reverse the Trump administrationâs shortsighted, industry-friendly overhaul of the National Environmental Policy Act, one of Americaâs bedrock environmental laws.
NEPA is a 50-year-old law that protects air, water and land by requiring federal agencies to conduct detailed environmental assessments of major infrastructure projects. In 2020, the Trump administration changed how the federal government implements the law in order to fast-track energy projects and other development, limiting public input on such projects and allowing federal agencies to ignore climate change when reviewing them.
The White House Council on Environmental Quality on Wednesday announced steps to restore provisions that had been in place for decades prior to the Trump-era overhaul, including requiring agencies to consider all environmental impacts of a proposed project and providing the flexibility to work with communities to consider alternatives that would minimize harm.
âThe basic community safeguards we are proposing to restore would help ensure that American infrastructure gets built right the first time, and delivers real benefits â not harms â to people who live nearby,â CEQ Chair Brenda Mallory said in a statement. âPatching these holes in the environmental review process will help reduce conflict and litigation and help clear up some of the uncertainty that the previous administrationâs rule caused.â
NICHOLAS KAMM via Getty Images President Joe Biden speaks about the bipartisan infrastructure bill and his Build Back Better agenda at the International Union of Operating Engineers training facility in Howell, Michigan, on Oct. 5.The Trump-era changes were the first major update to the law in more than four decades. While the Trump administration presented it as a long-overdue âmodernizationâ necessary to speed up permitting, critics saw it as a clear attack on environmental justice that largely benefited polluting industries. The NEPA review process has long been a primary avenue for communities, often low-income and communities of color, to challenge pipelines, power plants, airports and highways that pose potential risks to the environment and public health.
Bidenâs White House said the rules proposed Wednesday are âPhase 1â of a broader effort to strengthen the environmental law.
Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.), chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, applauded Wednesdayâs announcement as âa welcome first step in placing public health needs and the lives of Americans ahead of the profits of corporate polluters.â
âTodayâs move begins the process of restoring environmental protections that stood for decades prior to the Trump administration,â he said in a statement. âRestoring these protections is a necessary first step toward even stronger NEPA protections that are needed to improve public input opportunities under NEPA and to better protect communities from polluted air and water, especially those communities that are already overburdened by the cumulative effects of multiple pollution sources.â
RELATED...
0 Response to "White House Moves To Scrap Trump-Era Rewrite Of Key Environmental Law"
Post a Comment